logo
Kenyan blogger's wife seeks answers after his death in police custody

Kenyan blogger's wife seeks answers after his death in police custody

Reutersa day ago

NAIROBI June 14 (Reuters) - When the policemen came for Albert Ojwang - the Kenyan blogger whose death in custody sparked protests this week and prompted a rare acknowledgement of police brutality by the president - his wife initially thought he would be safe.
Unlike the dozens of political activists abducted by suspected security agents over the last year, the 31-year-old schoolteacher was taken to a police station and officers shared their phone numbers with his family.
"When they came, they were so soft. They were not violent," said Nevnine Onyango, who was present when the officers arrived, accusing her husband of insulting their "boss". "So that is what gave me even more confidence."
The next morning, a family member called with the news that Ojwang, the father of their three-year-old son, was dead.
In the week since, the blogger's death has become a lightning rod in a nation just one year removed from mass youth-led protests that were fuelled, in part, by disgust at pervasive police violence.
Hundreds protested in the capital Nairobi this week, with vehicles set ablaze and the police firing teargas. Demonstrators cited Ojwang's death as evidence that nothing had changed one year after more than 60 people were killed in demonstrations initially sparked by proposed tax hikes.
Ojwang was arrested in Homa Bay, in western Kenya, as part of an investigation triggered by a formal complaint from the deputy chief of the national police force, Eliud Lagat, according to the Independent Policing Oversight Authority, Kenya's government-funded police watchdog.
Lagat had stated he had been the target of alleged false and malicious information published on X, IPOA said.
Kenya's police chief initially implied that Ojwang had died by suicide but later apologised after an autopsy found that his wounds - including a head injury, neck compression and soft tissue damage - pointed to assault as the cause of death.
President William Ruto said on Wednesday that Ojwang had died "at the hands of the police", which he said was "heartbreaking and unacceptable".
Three people have so far been arrested in the case: the policeman in charge of the police station in Nairobi where Ojwang was found dead, a police constable and a closed-circuit television technician at the station.
Reuters was not able to reach Lagat for comment, and a police spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment. In the past, the police have called examples of abuse isolated incidents.
It is not clear what Ojwang posted that got the attention of the police. His social media accounts no longer appear to be active.
According to IPOA, which is investigating his death, Lagat's complaint triggered a probe that led to the arrest of another blogger.
Interrogations of that blogger identified Ojwang as a person of interest, IPOA said.
And so, last Saturday at lunchtime, police officers arrived at Ojwang's house on motorcycles and told him "there are some remarks that he had made about their boss, that the boss is corrupt", his wife Onyango said. They did not identify their boss.
They first took Ojwang to the local police station before telling his family they would transfer him to Nairobi, nearly 300 km (185 miles) away, she said.
She last heard from him at around 9 p.m. (1800 GMT) the Saturday of his arrest when he called her from Nairobi's Central Police Station. She said he sounded worried and asked if she would be able to come to Nairobi.
Onyango is now hoping for answers - and accountability - from IPOA's investigation.
"We always see these things on television, and it actually reached my door," she said of police abuses. "These people are supposed to protect us. They're not supposed to harm us."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LA mayor says 'No Kings' protests were peaceful... despite mass unrest across the nation
LA mayor says 'No Kings' protests were peaceful... despite mass unrest across the nation

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

LA mayor says 'No Kings' protests were peaceful... despite mass unrest across the nation

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass was slammed for calling the national 'No Kings' protests 'peaceful' despite two people - including a politician - dying in Minnesota and dozens more injured and arrested across the country. The widespread violence broke out amid President Donald Trump 's birthday military parade in Washington D.C. and anti-Trump marches across the country. Rowdy scenes were captured across big cities across America, including Portland, Salt Lake City, New York, Denver and Los Angeles as 2,000 protests took over with more than five million in attendance nationwide. The deadly assassinations of Minnesota State Representative Melissa and her husband Mike Hortman also occurred early on Saturday - and are believed to be politically motivated after 'No Kings' flyers were found in the Trump-supporter suspect's cars. There were a total of 15 separate 'No Kings' demonstrations across LA Saturday - and Bass said she had the luxury of riding in a helicopter to hover over each location. 'Sometimes people who aren't even a part of the main protest hang around, and then that's when you can have trouble,' the Democrat told KTLA5. 'I think that is happening off and on right now, but I do think at the end of the day, this will have been a successful, peaceful day. 'Every single one was peaceful … the Downtown one, which was a massive protest, was still overwhelmingly peaceful. I think oftentimes when you have a crowd this large, at the end, it becomes a little more difficult,' she added. Bass was berated on social media after saying that the protests in her city were peaceful - while also being slammed for her narrow-minded approach when so many other cities across the country were experiencing civil unrest on Saturday. One person wrote: 'By saying 'mostly peaceful' they're hoping you'll believe that they have control of the situation.' Another said: 'She really is incompetent.' A third person wrote: 'Karen Bass is living in a bubble, watching chaos from a helicopter. 'Overwhelmingly peaceful' is just a euphemism for a narrative that's crumbling. When the truth is too hot to handle, they retreat to the skies. This isn't leadership; it's cowardic…' While a fourth added: 'So 'mostly peaceful' then. At least that's what Mayor Bass and her acquaintances, all of whom live behind gates and armed security, experienced. Keep fiddling, Karen.' And another said: 'Bass has no idea what's a peaceful protest! It's mayhem in the LA streets RIGHT NOW! She knows it. She just will not admit it! Karen Bass failed during the LA fires & is failing now! It's all about being in power! Maybe LA & California should elect a competent mayor & governor!' A crowd of protestors were seen gathered in Downtown LA around 8.30pm local time, waving flags past the imposed curfew time set in place from last week's riots. Although it is unclear how long law enforcement allowed them to remain in the area, footage of the demonstrators appeared to be peaceful, the outlet reported. 'I mean, we give them time to disperse, and if it's clear that they are trying to leave, then there's a level of patience. But if they are not, then it's an unlawful assembly,' Bass said. Meanwhile in Salt Lake City, things quickly turned violent gunshots rang out while an estimated 10,000 people gathered to protest. Just after 10pm, officers with the Salt Lake City Police Department were notified of shots fired while protestors marched. An unidentified person was shot and left with life-threatening injuries as medical personnel tended to them. Meanwhile, officers pursued the suspect responsible after multiple witnesses pointed him out to them at the scene. Another two people involved were arrested, Salt Lake City Police Chief Brian Redd said. The man responsible was also shot and taken to the hospital where he is being treated under police observation, Utah News Dispatch reported. PORTLAND: Earlier in the day, several thousands had gathered downtown for a number of 'No Kings' protest across the city but it was only after 6pm that the protests grew violent He was seen in dramatic pictures and videos being arrested and taken away on a stretcher by police and paramedics. Although investigators are still looking to see what led to the shooting, Redd said: 'It appears they were involved at some level in the protest, or at least as part of the group that was walking.' Meanwhile, 17 people were arrested in Denver, Colorado, police said. It is unclear who was charged, but police said those people were nabbed for resisting arrest, failure to obey lawful order, obstruction of streets and unlawful throwing of projectiles, per CBS News. A protester clashed with authorities near the entrance of Interstate 25 while a group allegedly attempted to enter the road. Other demonstrators allegedly hurled rocks and other objects at officers during the protest. Around 10pm, a protester reportedly started a small fire on a road that was already closed to traffic. It is unclear if that person was part of the 17 arrested. Thousands of people attended the protest in Denver, with police labeling them as 'peaceful.' 'Since approximately noon today, DPD has managed five demonstrator marches near the State Capitol Building and in the downtown area. Those marches were peaceful,' the department told the outlet. It was also a scene of chaos in Portland, Oregon as hundreds of protesters dressed in black clashed with federal officers at the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. Federal officers decked out in tactical gear deployed smoke, tear gas, flash grenades and other projectiles as demonstrators threw fireworks and water bottles in response. Some even used a stop sign to smash through one of the doors to the ICE facility. Joseph R. Checklick Jr., 21, drove his SUV through a dispersing crowd in a parking lot in northern Virginia, which led to him 'striking at least one person with his vehicle,' police said in a statement. The protest took place throughout Saturday afternoon in Culpeper, a small town roughly 70 miles from Washington, D.C. There were huge, boisterous crowds marching, dancing, drumming, and chanting shoulder-to-shoulder in New York, Denver, Chicago, Austin and Los Angeles, some behind 'No Kings' banners. In some places, organizers handed out little American flags while others flew their flags upside down, a sign of distress. Mexican flags which have become a fixture of the Los Angeles protests against immigration raids, also made an appearance at some demonstrations Saturday. Atlanta's 5,000-capacity event quickly reached its limit, with thousands more gathered outside barriers to hear speakers in front of the state Capitol. Meanwhile, Melissa Hortman and her husband Mike were killed early on Saturday morning. Early Saturday morning a gunman, who police suspect as Vance Boelter, 57, opened fire inside the couple's Brooklyn Park home in what authorities are calling a politically motivated incident. Roughly 90 minutes before, Boelter allegedly fired several shots at State Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette. The Hortmans tragically died while the Hoffmans were rushed into surgery with critical injuries. They are now in recovery. Boelter managed to slip away from law enforcement and remains on the run as of Sunday afternoon. Inside his car police found handmade 'No Kings' flyers and a hit list of prominent abortion rights campaigners, many of them Democratic lawmakers. Boelter was a Trump supporter and opposed abortion, according to his roommate.

Trump threatens to expand travel ban list in coming months
Trump threatens to expand travel ban list in coming months

The Independent

time6 hours ago

  • The Independent

Trump threatens to expand travel ban list in coming months

The Trump administration is considering travel restrictions for 36 more countries, including major U.S. partners such as Egypt and Djibouti, according to an internal memo. Secretary of State Marco Rubio signed a memo that said listed nations had 60 days to meet new State Department requirements. The list includes 25 African countries, several Caribbean nations, four Asian countries, and three countries in Oceania. Countries have until Wednesday to provide an initial action plan to the State Department to meet the new requirements. This action follows Trump 's revival of his first-term travel ban and a full ban on entry from 12 countries, with restrictions on seven others, as part of his anti-immigration agenda.

Right back at ya! Trump's crude but effective rhetorical standby
Right back at ya! Trump's crude but effective rhetorical standby

The Guardian

time7 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Right back at ya! Trump's crude but effective rhetorical standby

Donald Trump and his allies wasted little time in branding the people protesting against immigration enforcement raids in Los Angeles as 'insurrectionists'. Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff for policy – particularly the vindictive kind – spoke darkly of a 'violent insurrection'. JD Vance, the vice-president, inveighed against 'insurrectionists carrying foreign flags' on the streets of the nation's second-biggest city. It didn't escape notice that an insurrection was exactly what the president was accused of instigating on 6 January 2021, when the flag being paraded through the Capitol was that of the Confederate secessionists. And that Trump hadn't shown quite the same enthusiasm for sending in the troops then. But simply accusing the leader of the Maga movement of hypocrisy feels like such a 2015 move. It barely registers as news these days. What's really notable is that this is the latest example of Trump's well-honed tactic of repurposing criticisms of himself to attack his enemies. The world was first introduced to this manoeuvre on 19 October 2016 during a presidential debate in Las Vegas. When Hillary Clinton accused Trump of being Vladimir Putin's puppet, Trump shot back: 'No puppet, no puppet … No, you're the puppet.' To many it sounded infantile, more proof of Trump's lack of seriousness as a candidate. Back then, Twitter was the go-to platform to register reaction, as CBS reported: ''NO, YOU'RE THE PUPPET!' A presidential candidate just went straight up preschool on his opponent,' one person tweeted. ''NO YOU'RE THE PUPPET' shows how truly childish our election system has become,' someone replied. True, but these reactions underestimated the power of this simple, some would say puerile, tactic. After all, this was a time when the term 'fake news' was still used in its original sense of fringe media stories that were deliberately untrue before Trump restyled it into a catch-all term for the mainstream media and anything it produces that he doesn't like. The fact that people are now less likely to associate 'fake news' with Pizzagate than with Trump's attacks on the likes of CNN shows just how effective this switcheroo is. But its real power lies in the way it undermines the very notion of truth. If everyone's an insurrectionist, no one is. As with Humpty Dumpty, words mean what Trump wants them to mean. The more you look, the more you see the tactic everywhere. It's a pretty safe bet the phrase 'election interference' had never tripped off Trump's tongue before 2016, when the question of Russia's role in helping secure his election ultimately led to the Mueller report. After he was charged with election interference following the 2020 vote, however, he accused, among others, the Biden administration, the Secret Service, Google, the British Labour party and Kamala Harris (on the – entirely false – grounds she had posted AI-created images of her rallies) of 'election interference' in the 2024 contest. When Democrats accused Trump of trying to 'weaponize' the Department of Justice in his attempts to illicitly stay in office after his 2020 election defeat, it was only a question of time before 'weaponization' would re-emerge, rotated 180 degrees, as a favourite term in the Maga lexicon of vitriol. Once Republicans regained control of the House of Representatives in 2023, it was they who set up a formal subcommittee on 'weaponization' of the federal government, to castigate their enemies. And when the Trump 2.0 administration weaponized the federal government to fire justice department officials who had participated in Jack Smith's 'election interference' case against Trump on the grounds that they had weaponized the government … we had truly stepped through the looking glass. Accusing anti-racist campaigners of racism? Check. Denouncing Jews as antisemites? Check. And it's all helped by another apparently childish but startlingly effective tactic: repetition. Why did a majority of Republicans in 2024 believe that Biden's election victory four years earlier was rigged despite all evidence to the contrary? Probably because Trump spent fours years, day after day, saying it was. Why did so many Americans in the 2024 election campaign insist they had been better off four years earlier despite the demonstrable fact that Covid-hit 2020 had been an economic disaster? Well, maybe Trump's constant bragging about presiding over the 'greatest economy in the history of the world' had more than a little method to it. (As the musician Mark E Smith said in another context: 'It's not repetition; it's discipline.' You can say that again.) Trump's rhetorical tropes may display a certain reptilian genius but there is nothing new under the sun. 'The English follow the principle that when one lies, one should lie big, and stick to it. They keep up their lies, even at the risk of looking ridiculous.' So claimed a 1941 article called Churchill's Lie Factory written by one Joseph Goebbels, who had been accused of … exactly that. Chris Taylor is a subeditor at the Guardian US and author of The Black Carib Wars: Freedom, Survival, and the Making of the Garifuna

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store